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yann64 7609d35287 Initial scaffold : Laravel 12 + PostgreSQL + auth + domaine métier (étapes 1-5)
- Laravel 12 sur PHP 8.5, Breeze (Blade/Tailwind/Alpine.js)
- Docker Compose dev (PostgreSQL 18 + Redis) et prod (stack complète + nginx)
- Migrations et models : lieux, sections, dépôts, source_types/fields, sources, relevés
  - Colonne JSONB data sur releves avec colonnes générées indexées (nom, prenom, date_evenement)
  - Index GIN pour la recherche fulltext
- Enums : UserRole, SourceStatus (avec transitions), CalendarType, FieldType
- RoleMiddleware (alias `role`) + helpers isAdmin/isSectionManager sur User
- CRUD Lieux (arbre hiérarchique, calcul nom_long en cascade)
- CRUD admin : Sections (+ gestion membres), Dépôts, Types de sources (+ champs dynamiques, drag & drop)
- CRUD Sources : visibilité filtrée par rôle, assignation membres, workflow de statut

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-04 16:16:37 +02:00

118 lines
3.9 KiB
PHP

<?php
use App\Models\User;
return [
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Authentication Defaults
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| This option defines the default authentication "guard" and password
| reset "broker" for your application. You may change these values
| as required, but they're a perfect start for most applications.
|
*/
'defaults' => [
'guard' => env('AUTH_GUARD', 'web'),
'passwords' => env('AUTH_PASSWORD_BROKER', 'users'),
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Authentication Guards
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Next, you may define every authentication guard for your application.
| Of course, a great default configuration has been defined for you
| which utilizes session storage plus the Eloquent user provider.
|
| All authentication guards have a user provider, which defines how the
| users are actually retrieved out of your database or other storage
| system used by the application. Typically, Eloquent is utilized.
|
| Supported: "session"
|
*/
'guards' => [
'web' => [
'driver' => 'session',
'provider' => 'users',
],
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| User Providers
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| All authentication guards have a user provider, which defines how the
| users are actually retrieved out of your database or other storage
| system used by the application. Typically, Eloquent is utilized.
|
| If you have multiple user tables or models you may configure multiple
| providers to represent the model / table. These providers may then
| be assigned to any extra authentication guards you have defined.
|
| Supported: "database", "eloquent"
|
*/
'providers' => [
'users' => [
'driver' => 'eloquent',
'model' => env('AUTH_MODEL', User::class),
],
// 'users' => [
// 'driver' => 'database',
// 'table' => 'users',
// ],
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Resetting Passwords
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| These configuration options specify the behavior of Laravel's password
| reset functionality, including the table utilized for token storage
| and the user provider that is invoked to actually retrieve users.
|
| The expiry time is the number of minutes that each reset token will be
| considered valid. This security feature keeps tokens short-lived so
| they have less time to be guessed. You may change this as needed.
|
| The throttle setting is the number of seconds a user must wait before
| generating more password reset tokens. This prevents the user from
| quickly generating a very large amount of password reset tokens.
|
*/
'passwords' => [
'users' => [
'provider' => 'users',
'table' => env('AUTH_PASSWORD_RESET_TOKEN_TABLE', 'password_reset_tokens'),
'expire' => 60,
'throttle' => 60,
],
],
/*
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Password Confirmation Timeout
|--------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
| Here you may define the number of seconds before a password confirmation
| window expires and users are asked to re-enter their password via the
| confirmation screen. By default, the timeout lasts for three hours.
|
*/
'password_timeout' => env('AUTH_PASSWORD_TIMEOUT', 10800),
];